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Famous Quotes
Quotes by David Herbert Lawrence
- A man has no religion who has not slowly and painfully gathered one together, adding to it, shaping it and one's religion is never complete and final, it seems, but must always be undergoing modification.
- All vital truth contains the memory of all that for which it is not true.
- Be still when you have nothing to say when genuine passion moves you, say what you've got to say, and say it hot.
- Creation destroys as it goes, throws down one tree for the rise of another. But ideal mankind would abolish death, multiply itself million upon million, rear up city upon city, save every parasite alive, until the accumulation of mere existence is swollen to a horror.
- Death is the only pure, beautiful conclusion of a great passion.
- Design in art, is a recognition of the relation between various things, various elements in the creative flux. You can't invent a design. You recognize it, in the fourth dimension. That is, with your blood and your bones, as well as with your eyes.
- Do not allow to slip away from you freedoms the people who came before you won with such hard knocks.
- Ethics and equity and the principles of justice do not change with the calendar.
- God is only a great imaginative experience.
- I am in love - and, my God, it is the greatest thing that can happen to a man. I tell you, find a woman you can fall in love with. Do it. Let yourself fall in love. If you have not done so already, you are wasting your life.
- I can never decide whether my dreams are the result of my thoughts, or my thoughts the result of my dreams.
- I can't bear art that you can walk round and admire. A book should be either a bandit or a rebel or a man in the crowd.
- I hate the actor and audience business. An author should be in among the crowd, kicking their shins or cheering them on to some mischief or merriment.
- I want to live my life so that my nights are not full of regrets.
- In every living thing there is the desire for love.
- It is a fine thing to establish one's own religion in one's heart, not to be dependent on tradition and second-hand ideals. Life will seem to you, later, not a lesser, but a greater thing.
- It is quite true, as some poets said, that the God who created man must have had a sinister sense of humor, creating him a reasonable being, yet forcing him to take this ridiculous posture, and driving him with blind craving for this ridiculous performance.
- Life is a travelling to the edge of knowledge, then a leap taken.
- Loud peace propaganda makes war seem imminent.
- Men and women should stay apart, till their hearts grow gentle towards one another again.
- Men are freest when they are most unconscious of freedom. The shout is a rattling of chains, always was.
- Men! The only animal in the world to fear.
- Money is our madness, our vast collective madness.
- My great religion is a belief in the blood, the flesh, as being wiser than the intellect. We can go wrong in our minds. But what our blood feels and believes and says, is always true. The intellect is only a bit and a bridle.
- My whole working philosophy is that the only stable happiness for mankind is that it shall live married in blessed union to woman-kind - intimacy, physical and psychical between a man and his wife. I wish to add that my state of bliss is by no means perfect.
- Myth is an attempt to narrate a whole human experience, of which the purpose is too deep, going too deep in the blood and soul, for mental explanation or description.
- Never trust the artist. Trust the tale. The proper function of the critic is to save the tale from the artist who created it.
- Oh literature, oh the glorious Art, how it preys upon the marrow in our bones. It scoops the stuffing out of us, and chucks us aside. Alas!
- Ours is an excessively conscious age. We know so much, we feel so little.
- Ours is essentially a tragic age, so we refuse to take it tragically.
- People always make war when they say they love peace.
- Reason is a supple nymph, and slippery as a fish by nature. She had as leave give her kiss to an absurdity any day, as to syllogistic truth. The absurdity may turn out truer.
- Sex and beauty are inseparable, like life and consciousness. And the intelligence which goes with sex and beauty, and arises out of sex and beauty, is intuition.
- Since obscenity is the truth of our passion today, it is the only stuff of art - or almost the only stuff.
- So long as you don't feel life's paltry and a miserable business, the rest doesn't matter, happiness or unhappiness.
- The business of art is to reveal the relation between man and his environment.
- The Christian fear of the pagan outlook has damaged the whole consciousness of man.
- The essential function of art is moral. But a passionate, implicit morality, not didactic. A morality which changes the blood, rather than the mind.
- The fairest thing in nature, a flower, still has its roots in earth and manure.
- The great living experience for every man is his adventure into the woman. The man embraces in the woman all that is not himself, and from that one resultant, from that embrace, comes every new action.
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